algorithmic modeling for Rhino
After a request by Arend I added an unflatten component for reversing a flattening operation. If you still have the original tree and the number of items hasn't changed it can be put back together:
However I just cannot come up with a good idea for an icon for Unflatten. The best I could come up with was an acorn, which is a tenuous link at best.
Any ideas welcome, but please remember that the icon must de drawable and recognizable in a 20x20 (24x24 in an emergency) pixel image.
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David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia
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What book are you referring to?
And I dont see how it makes sense (if at all possible, try really hard to imagine a new user looking at that icon rather than yourself, and without being biased, tell me if it makes sense). How can any uninitiated individual (i.e. new user, not Michael Pryor) fathom that a sprout coming out of a tree stump would refer to 'unflatten' tree? Even that sentence by itself sounds absurd. I guess at the very least there is the [wholly dependent] GH user forum to explain all. Bad user experience once commercially released is what concerns me the most.
Thanks. One quick point: GH isn't a coding langauge! Its an algorithm editor.
Now we can argue :
Correct! It is not however coding; clearly Meteusz overlooked the all important 'C' word in my post! A form of programming it most certainly is, but nowhere in my post did I suggest otherwise. Heck, even managing your washing machine cycle is a form of programming. What a wonderful digital world we live in. But lets not get into another 'visual programming and why it sucks' debate, I think everyone is well versed on the limitations.
The whole concept of data "trees" is pretty complex. While a real tree is a nice analogy for what this data structure looks like, not all the complex data manipulation operations find a similar equivalent in nature.
Think about "Graft" in a botanical way. You transfer a top part of one plant onto the roots of another. I think, "graft" would be a far more fitting analogy for this component here. Even you might agree, that a tree stump is a good symbol for a flattened tree. Now this root contains all data. If you transfer a new tree crown onto this stump, it will transfer all this data into then new structure... now regraft data from a flattened tree and you get a combination of the two symbols.
Problem is, there already is a component that adds new branches to an existing tree, which in botanical terms is also called grafting...
all that said, find a symbol that works in 20x20 pixels...
Sometimes an operation can be represented by an icon very well, sometimes it's very difficult and sometimes it's easy but we all still use a visual metaphor because it has become the standard representation.
An icon is not supposed to explain what a certain function does. If it can, great, if not, no harm done. There are much better ways of explaining functionality and tooltips are right at the top of that list.
Icons need to serve the following purposes:
These are of course my personal feelings and you're welcome to disagree with them. I would concur that Grasshopper has become harder and harder to learn over time as more functions were added. I hope I can do a better job in the future of 'hiding' expert functionality until the user is ready for it than I've done so far, but this is a very difficult task.
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David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia
Can some analogy be proposed that actually refers to what the component is doing....
I can't think of a good analogy. Most components that operate on tree data-structures often have quite abstract icons associated with them. It's relatively easy to visually represent geometric operations, but tree management modifies the way in which data is structured. Language and imagery to do with data trees is quite metaphor-heavy by necessity.
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David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia
Flatten tree icon: a tree outline, similar to some of the attached suggestions posted on this thread, being compressed with a bold arrow on top directing downwards
Unflatten tree: As above but with the arrow pointing upwards?
Simple, more intuitive (although far from perfect), and better than the current offering. Thoughts?
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